Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 89, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 April 1910 — Page 3
■fir ■ jiWwii SKAft' 'sj h 1 U mmW ? M BBim “ai rn'nm TH 11 BKnUbP i; ““ co -HOL 3 PER CENT ■MH Wffl® lllllll;; tmgUie Stomachs anlßowdsof ■Bi[ Promotes DigestionJCharfU hIB ■ ngss andfestContalnsnpitterj h Opiuni.Morphine nor Mineral uHh h Not Narcotic. IM | J ■fflffii :: „ -■ Mia! ' jUx.Sana +• I g®kj /ItMkSeltt- I Mffii j x I Klffl : : Aperfect Remedy for Consftpajfflffirc Hon, Sour Stomach.Dtaniioa jffl&tt Worms,ConvulsionsJfeverishglgn,' ness and Loss or Sleep. IBg! S FhcSimik Signature of IFS ■' NEW YORK. ■Omra,' Exact Copy of Wrapper.
The Overland The Simplest Car The Overland outsells all other cars, largely because of its matchless simplicity.
The Overland—hardly more than, two years old—has become the sensation of motordom. Four factories, employing 4,000 men, turn out 140 Overlands dally to meet the overwhelming demand. Texas takes 1,500, Kansas 1,000, lowa 1,000, Nebraska 750—a1l for this season’s delivery. So it is in every section where this remarkable car him been known for a year. One reason is that the Overland is almost trouble-proof. The usual complex features have all been eliminated. A child can master the car in ten minutes. A novice can run it and care for It One simply pushes pedals forward or backward to get on low speed, high speed or reverse. It is as simple as walking. ■ The car almost cares for Itself. Many an owner has run from 7,000 to 10,000 miles without even cleaning a spark plug.
91.000t* tl.SOO.—Aocanlli., to I. .nJ BOW..
BakcS“Roasts~"Broils-Tossts BAKES bread, pie and cake—wlw bakes them perfectly all through, and browns them appetizing]/. "wS yir ROASTS beef, poultry and game H ■ With a Btead V beat, which preserves the rich natural flavor. »ROILS steaks and chops—makes gSHW dH them tender and inviting. TOASTS bread, muffins, crackIT ers and cbeese. KJ/tel drudgery of coal and ashes; no stooping to get at the ov en; no smoke, no dust, j J ti l odor —just good cooking / * if \ greater fuel economy. / V \ Irons and water in wash** J boiler always hot. The New ioit 1 aa . a for kee P in 8 Plates and food hot Drop shelves for the coffee pot or saucepana, and nickeled tntwtrarke . I*J l *® lohK turquoise-blue enamel chimneys. The nickel finish with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove very attrac*'v<! cleanlines;. Made with 1, 2 3 2 and 3-bumer stoves can be had with or without Cabinet CMnwunavn: gtore-««tk.t roris-rewpimcnaa.-Bvesy dealer sverywhare; If not at yours, write for DoecriDtin Circular to the nearest agency of the wrauar Standard Oil Company
ICASTOBIA I For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the X. » Signature /Am o f mmf IJr ln nr Use Vr For Over Thirty Years ICASTORIA TW« O.KT.UW eOMraav. HtWYOK orrv.
No expert Is needed. And the cost of upkeep is the smallest of any capar ble car. Then the Overland gives more for the money than any other car in existence. This is due to our enormous production and our automatic machinery. • For 11,000 you can get a 25-horse power Overland with a 102-inch wheel base. No other car of such size and power sells nearly so low. For 81,250 you can get a 40-hOrse power Overland with a 112-inch wheel base. All prices include five lamps and magneto. Know the Facts More people are buying Overlands than any other ear. There mint be some very strong reasons, and those reasons will appeal to you. We have two free -books which will tell you the facts. Every motor car lover should read them. Cut out this coupon as a reminder to write for these books to-day.
E 27 The Willys-Overland Co. Toledo, Ohls LlcemH Vader Seldea Palest Please send me the two books fires.
THINGS YOU MAY NOT KNOW
The regulation step of the British army is 120 to the minute. Salmon, pike and goldfish are said to be the only fish that never sleep. Peanut cake seems to be supplanting cottonseed cake as the preferred food for Swedish cattle. , Last year the geological survey fixed prices on 2,598,621 acres of public coal lands and classified 10,857,572 acres as non-coal land. An all-rubber automobile-wheel has been patented, rigid at the center and with the hardness lessening gradually until the circumference is reached. The Paris Gaulois says that a British Catholic whose name is not stated has given the Pope fIOO.OQO with which to establish a Bible institution. There are twenty-one States In the Union whose combined business does not equal that of the New York post office, which is more than the post office business of Philadelphia and Chicago combined. It is already proposed, with the approval of the mayor, to re-establish the nlckel-in-the-slot machine in the cigar stores of San Francisco and to restore the recently suspended privilege of smoking In street cars. The oil palm is, perhaps, the greatest commercial asset In West Africa. On the palm the African has long depended for food, clothing, shelter, furniture, utensils, tools, weapons, ornaments, medicines and intoxicating beverages. On a ride' of 1,250 miles, at an average of forty-four miles daily, a Russian cavalry officer lost only six pounds in weight, while his horse—nearly twenty years old—lost fortyfive pounds. One day eighty miles was covered. During the last three years there has been a fairly steady increase in the quantity of natural gas used In this country for domestic purposes, a decrease In the quantity used for manufacturing purposes, and an increase In the average price. Here Is a fish story of the 1910 crop published by the St. James’ Budget: “While Mr. Mcßorie, an angler visiting Loch Tay, was fishing in the Killln waters with two rods, two salmon took the baits simultaneously and both were secured. The salmon weighed seventeen pounds each.” Mrs. Gabrielle Mulliner is reported to be the author of the proposed city ordinance requiring fire drilfc In small factories in New York. Mayor Gaynor is said to have told the City Federation of Women’s Clubs that if it would have an ordinance drawn up that would hold water he would use his Influence to put it through. Mrs. Martha C. Taller has given |25,000 to the New York University to endow a free clinic in connection with Bellevue Hospital Medical College. This is the first gift received to the endowment of the free clinic, and it Is hoped to increase the endowment to at least |IOO,OOO. The money given by Mrs. Taller is to establish a memorial to the late William H. Taller. “No one meets such various kinds of people as we do,” said a librarian. “You see that little old man over there? He is going through the encyclopedias, at a time. He comes in every day and begins where he left off the day before. He has read through an entire set and is beginning another. Pretty dry reading, some of it, one would say.”—New York Sun. Who Invented the postage stamp? A writer in Chamber’s Journal points out that the Inventor of the “adhesive postage stamp” was undoubtedly Rowland Hill. In 1837 he proposed the use of “a bit of paper just large enough to bear the stamp, and covered at the back with a glutinous wash, which the buyer might, by the application of a little moisture, attach to the back of the letter.” Miss Mary Agnes Cunningham is the first woman to be appointed *a member of the school board of St Paul, Minn. She has taught In the schools of St. Paul for twenty-five years and is . the president of the Teachers’ Federation. During a fight she conducted for teachers’ pensions she saw a good deal of the mayor, who was so Impressed by her character and ability that he appointed her a member of the school board. Turkey’s war minister has just ordered forks for the convenience ftf* soldiers in barracks. The fork did not appear in Europe as a common table implement until the seventeenth century, though as early as the thirteenth century gold and silver ones were made for special purposes. The ordinary diner was only provided with a trencher, a napkin and a spoon. For knife he used his own, which he carried about. There was no second trencher, no second spoon. When the several courses came along he exercised his Ingenuity and mopped his trencher with his bread. From time to time various colonies of Jews have actually returned to the holy land. There are records of Jewish settlements there as early as 1170 and in the sixteenth century the city of Tiberias, “where only Jews were to dwell,” was rebuilt. But it was not until comparatively modern times that the founding of regular colonies began. In 1878 the ideas of Laurence Oliphant and the Earl of Shaftesbury took definite shape In the purchase of seven hundred acres of land by the Jews of Jerusalem and the foundation of the colony of Petah Tikwah. After the Russian persecution of 1881 large numbers of Jews emigrated and at the end of 1898 there were about five thou* sand Jewish colonists in Palestine.
Lay man Finds Stomach Cure
Good Christian a«4 Family Man, but Had Poor Utaeattve Or<ans—WS*t Cured Him You Can Get Free. It is a generally admitted fact that among ministers and their families Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the favorite laxative. It is not often that the layman
has a chance to “speak up in meeting,” and hence these words from Mr. Joseph Murphy, of Indianapolis, Ind., whose picture we present herewith: “All my life I had needed a laxative to cure my constipation and stomach trouble, I couldn't eat anything; I couldn’t get what I did eat out of my system. I tried everything, because my work, engineer on a railroad
train, makes it necessary that I feel strong and well. Finally it was my good fortune to meet up with Dr. Caldwell’s byrup Pepsin, through the recommendation or a friend. I took it and was cured. That is some time ago, but I am still cured.’’ It can be bought of any druggist for 50 cents or 11 a bottle. Send your address and a free test bottle will be sent to your home. If there is some mystery about your case that you want explained write the doctor. For the advice or free sample address Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 202 Caldwell Bldg., Monticello, 111.
His Name Fitted Him.
Not very long ago a wealthy Washington gentleman had a new valet whose name was somewhat of a puzzle to him. The initials were V. D. C. Cheney, and his employer wondered at times what Cheney’s name could be. One morning he inquired. “It’s like this, sir," replied the valet, who happened to be an Englishman. “My mother dearly loved to read novels when she was young, and some of the names stuck in her memory. One was valet de chambre. She never knew just exactly what it meant, but the French sounded well, and ehe had me christened that. It fits me, don’t you thing so, sir?”—National Magazine. t
PRACTICALLY HELPLESS.
AH Broken Down with Baclxmcke nnd Kidney Tronbl«»>. Mrs. Matilda Lindemann, 4423 Wentworth Ave., Chicago, 111., says:
“Twelve years kidney disorders distressed me. My back ached, my appetite was poor, my eyesight failed me and nervousness and dizzy spells afflicted me. Finally _ my hands and arms got practically paralyzed, and I was so weak I could
hardly drag myself across the floor. Doan’s Kidney Pills have done wonders for me. I feel strong and sound since using them, my back hardly ever hurts and the other troubles are gone.” Remember the name—Doan’s. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. FosterMilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Baby Sleoplesa with Awful Itcking. “When our baby was seven weeks old he broke out with what we thought was heat, but which gradually grew worse. We called in a doctor. He said it was eczema and from that time we doctored six months with three of the best doctors in Atchison but he only got worse. His face, head and hands were a solid sore. There was no end to the suffering for him. We had to tie his little hands to keep him from scratching. He never knew what it was to sleep well from the time he took the disease until he was cured. He kept us awake all hours of the night and his health wasn’t what you would call good. We tried everything but the right thing. "Finally I got a set of the Cuticura Remedies and I am pleased to say we did not use all of them until he was cured. We have waited a year and a half to see if it would return but it never has and to-day his skin is clear and fair as it possibly could be. I hope Cuticura may save some one else’s little ones suffering and also their pocket-books. John Leason, 1403 Atchison St., Atchison, Kan., Oct. 19, 1909.”
Free to Our Readers.
Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, for 48-page Illustrated Eye Book Free. Write all about Your Eye Trouble and they will advise as to the Proper Application of the Murine Eye Remedies in Your Special Case. Your Druggist will tell you that Murine Relieves Sore Eyes, Strengthens Weak Eyes. Doesn’t Smart, Soothes Eye Pain, and sells for 50c. Try It in Your Eyes and in Baby’s Eyes for Scajy Eyelids and Granulation.
Afraid of Ghosts ’ Many people ore afraid of ghosts. Few people /< ore afraid of germs. Yet the ghost ia a fancy and ?? the germ ia a fact. If the germ could be magnified ,¥J to a size equal to its terrors it would appear more \• terrible than any fire-breathing dragon. Germs can’t be avoided. They arc in the air we breathe, the water we drink. I The germ can only prosper when the condition of the system gives it free scope to establish itaelf and develop. When there ia a deficiency of vital force, languor, restlessness, a sallow cheek, • hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the 1 sleep ia broken, it is time to guard against the germ. You ean I fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Gold- ■ «n Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power, th the A system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stom- M •ch and organa of digestion and nutrition in working condition so U that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in wLhto V UM .... Golden Medical Discovery” contains no alimhot whfrkv ar V I ill habit-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed on’its outside ft I 111 wrapper. It ia not a secret nostrum but a medicine os known *V HI coMrosmoN and with a record of 40 yean of tares. substitute—there is nothing ” just as good.” Ask your neighbo” NA
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
t It . VR ■■ »
Mr. Joseph Murphy
Beautiful Wall Coatings for Homes.
lkl
What Ailed It.
“I wish you would tell me what the trouble is with this watch,” said the customer, handing it to the jeweler. “The trouble," said the jeweler, looking at the number of the timepiece and referring to his ledger, “Is that I haven’t been paid yet for the cleaning I gave it two years ago.”
A LARGE PACKAGE OF A-B-C TEA
costs 25c. Cures constipation and bladder trouble. All dealers sell it An English agricultural society is raising a fund with which to exterminate the sparrow.
PAVIS’ PAINKILLER
■boald be taken without dSufwbSTmr. cheat and tickling throat warn yon that an annoying cold threaten* At all drugalits In Xc.Sie and 56c bottle* A greatly increased consumption of peanuts in Germany is reported. Mrs. Winslow’s Soorxnro Srnrrr for Children toothing; softens the rums. reduces inflammation, allays pain, cores wind oolio. 25 cents a bottle.
Why ? ReCflliae Alabastine is better “ CCaUBC and much cheaper Mf/j-. a Ml than wall p*per—does not harbor insects ■ W D ° r d “®“® gem* like wall paper. Cte/c't'X' T> z» fl 11 Alabastine Is far better than any kind of Kalsomine kalsomine rube sff and flakes off. Alabastine does not. because cl ean, stylish, costs little and to easy to put o®. The Sanitary Wall Coating I made from pure native alabaster. It cornea in all aorta of rich, soft, ■ es that enable you, at small cost, to decorate your walla in the same ■ handsome city homes. ■ • adheres to the wall of its own cementing quahtiea. It nsedano dirty sbe 1 i ritt kalsomine or wall paper. Anyone can deccrate with ainheerfne you , dth cold water and apply with a flat wall brush. Simple dirwitsia printed «*»<"**•
}: 4*2 Grandville Ave v •- Crand Rapids. Mieh. • f At no east to no, please send your | Alabastine book and tell me about your | I neaoSan. * t •• ; *—•••• i * • : : I A » County .State •
® r ” PINK Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid si rep on ths tansue. Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy; 50c and flli a bottle; 95 and .910 the dozen. Sold by all drusyista and horse scute houses, or seat, express paid, by the manttecturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO M Chemists, GOSHEN, INDIANA
•»* Newatthema. UM TNEKEELCT üßimni, rmfiforiiil, DwicMeUfo I /tmpC n . w * Gloves l-AAUI 1_,3 firm FREE for purehaoe ot 160 hlsh-srade articles to select AGENTS Combination TNwcopeVopera MUST S1 “* h ‘« r *«*• Acree fertile dairy country;
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Our Astounding Free Offer B WiwfflMndnM., complete color plan for the ■ walls of your home. 'We will furnish Frw M gendla to help you male, your home beautiful ■ We wfll send you at ones, Frw, a book about ■ home decoration, samples of Alabastine Color ■ effects, and complete valuable information to ■ help you make your home chowful clean and ■ hand name Wfe To Set all this, seat the eaapast ar • postal oard at ease. K Alabastine Company I 482 Grandvilla Avena* B Grand Rapids, Minh. JS
Don't Wait TiU Night The moment you need help, take a candy Caacant. Then headaches vanish, dullness disappears. The results are natural, gentle, prompt. No harsher physic does more good, and all harsh physics injure. Veet-pooket bos. 19 cents—at drae-ateraa. People new use a mfllioa boxes monthly. Ml f) BBIA TH AU extcrn * l varieties suoIsllnllßrK ceM ‘» u Y Seated by the UflltULII Saxonite method. No knife or caustic plasters. Saxonite is a natural mineral. harmless to healthy tissue. Indorsed by prominent physician*. Investiration solicited. Address CHICAGO SAXONITE HOSPITAL M. L. Nevins, Supt. 239 Asblsal Boalevard CIICAM. lUMMO GALLSTONES ‘'BEcnO-BOLVO-TOMK.- v»e It atoo to cure any ailment of the Uver. Btomaeh or Boweto—DVSPKR . Pertloelmv Free. Address GALL* STORK REMEDY CO., Bole United States Areas* Department Z. MS Dearbera Bu, OBICAGO, lUL For Sale JW fwlA Chicken E ( j££oO ß^ > r''l I «^U^ I W 120 ACRES B. N. V. No. 18—1010 rWSHIM TO ABVEBTISHS. »lesM *• sol tall Ip ■enlien yen saw ths Uvortiseneal In Ihia paMh
